She may have said, “I do,” but she doesn’t remember, so a judge granted Alma Tremmel, 32, of Altoona, Pa., an annulment of her two-month-old marriage.

Tremmel was hospitalized in critical condition, on a respirator and taking powerful drugs for pneumonia and depression, when the bedside vows took place, she said. “I don’t really remember much about the entire hospital stay,” she said.

Her jilted groom, Edward Wert, 35, didn’t contest the annulment.

An Israeli woman showed up at a hospital in Tiberias with a unique complaint – she had swallowed a fork while struggling to retrieve a cockroach that had jumped into her throat, according to published reports.

A doctor operated and removed the fork, lodged sideways in her stomach.

When an Omaha cop notified Judie Howell that her son had been killed in an auto accident, he didn’t follow standard procedure and do it in person. He left a brief message on her answering machine.

“My son meant the world to me,” Howell told KETV. “They never should have left a message like that on an answering machine.”

An Albuquerque company has found a new use for unwanted, spent military munitions – it turns them into animal feed.

The guinea “pig” used by TPL Inc. in developing the munition munchies is a lamb named Shaboom. She gobbles up the feed made from nitrogen-based chemicals and other dismantled gun propellants.

But unfortunately for TPL, animal-feed buyers aren’t as enthusiastic.

Nine siblings who lived in different orphanages in Russia are finally living under the same roof together – in central Florida.

The youngsters, who are from 3 to 14 years old, were abandoned by their father after their mother died.

They arrived in the United States this week to spend a month with Anna and Jim Wottring in Oviedo, Fla., in hopes of finding adoptive families.

The Wottrings, who have raised four kids of their own and are nearing retirement, said they were delighted to make use of their nine empty beds, pool, trampoline and horses at their 8-acre spread.